A SHORT HISTORY OF THE CONNECTICUT LAW REVIEW
Connecticut Law Review is the oldest
student-run organization at the University of Connecticut
School of Law. It began as the Board of Student Editors,
which was established in 1947 to publish student-written
material in the Connecticut Bar Journal. The Board
of Student Editors published its first section, entitled
Comments on Recent Decisions, in Volume 21 of the
Connecticut Bar Journal. Later, the name of this
section was changed to Comments: Recent Decisions and
Statutes to reflect the expanded scope of the Board's
work. The Board of Student Editors became a member of
the National Conference of Law Reviews in 1953.
In 1957, the section was renamed
the Connecticut Law Review after Board members
began publishing articles which commented on broad areas
of law rather than on recent court decisions. In total,
the Board of Student Editors published 2,380 pages of
student-written material in 83 issues of the Connecticut
Bar Journal, spanning from Volume 21 through Volume
42. As part of an effort to improve the national reputation
of the University of Connecticut School of Law, the Connecticut
Law Review was established as a separate organization
in 1968. Although the Connecticut Law Review originally
published only two issues per year, this was later expanded
to four. This year, for the second time, the Connecticut
Law Review will publish five issues. This year marks
the thirty-seventh anniversary of the Connecticut Law
Review.
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